dammitmasa (
dammitmasa) wrote in
munebox2013-09-10 12:14 pm
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- I don't play for shipping, fluff, or smut. If it arrives naturally, I'll play it. But not as a starting point.
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- I will play prose or brackets, but definitely prefer prose.
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He was offered silk, but he instead chose Jon's more knightly attire. It was meant for traveling on the road and not for sitting in halls to eat. The garb was not the most appropriate, but it was thicker and more coarse than the softer clothes he'd been offered instead. Gendry felt a bit more comfortable that way, even if only a little. But the bright colors made him feel as though he was a walking target.
When he arrived at the High Hall, there was only Alayne sitting. Food was still being set out, but the feast had largely been assembled. Only the boy lord and his maester had yet to be in attendance. Warily, Gendry approached the table and rested a hand on the back of a chair.
"M'lady," he said in greeting. "Am I late?"
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This time, she stood. Not out of deference, but so that she could welcome him -- as a lady of the house ought to welcome her guests. Sansa marvelled at the difference made by fresh clothing and a close trim, although she found she already missed the scruff of his chin. At one point, she thought that all gallant men ought to be cleanly shaven. But lately, she longed for the rougher aesthetic of the north.
Even so, Robert's bastard was handsome. More so when he smiles, she thought.
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He could easily tell which seat was Robin's. It was the head of the table, large and important. But Alayne had one seat beside that chair. He suspected the maester would sit in the other. The question was whether the vacant seat next to Alayne was his or the one beside the maester. It would be presumptuous to take a seat next to her.
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A glint of mischief appeared in Sansa's expression. "Here," she touched the ornate wooden bauble topping the back of the chair next to her own. "It's nearer the fire. I assume, naturally, that being near it is your preference."
He had looked so at home between the flying sparks and the forge's glow.
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"If it pleases, m'lady."
He rounded the table and stood behind the seat, but felt keenly aware of how close this would be putting her near her. He just had to eat and pay that no mind. She was a lady and they'd have others watching besides.
"It all smells good."
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Sansa returned to her seat, thereby freeing him of his duty to remain standing.
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"What are they like? The Royces?"
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There was no delicate way to explain how Petyr had bought Nestor's support by raising him to lordship with a cadet branch: House Royce of the Gates of the Moon. "Lord Nestor supports my father's cause; the rest of his family -- Lord Yohn back in Runestone? Decidedly does not."
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"Will it come to battle?"
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It's why going here was so stupid. They ought to have left well enough alone. But the Lady...
The Lady's rage had only grown when she learned of her sister's death.
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This, she knew, was a lie. She thought many fine things of Petyr Baelish, but she knew he wasn't a proponent of peace. He liked the advantages gained by playing peaceful, and he knew how to make it appear as though he took a higher road. But he had arranged regicide with such cold ease. And he lied like he was born to it.
"I suppose a blacksmith would not welcome peace."
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"My master made a good living before the war broke out. I'd rather keep my skin than earn a few gold pieces in my pocket."
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"Certainly; I apologize. If I disparaged your master or you, it was not my intention." Men have risked skins for gold pieces for centuries. Her true thoughts slipped between the cracks of the stilted courtesy she wielded like a shield. "I have nothing but tremendous respect for the craftsmen of all Seven Kingdoms."
I wonder if your master made metal sing for Lannister soldiers; for Kingsguard; for the King's Justice.
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"But I didn't want any war. I've been in the middle of it ever since they chopped off the Hand's head. From the Watch to Harenhal to the Brotherhood all the way to Storm's End. I'll be glad to see the end of it."
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At least this was not a lie. Sansa wanted the war over; her stakes in its outcome had dwindled to such narrow hopes. Could it truly be that she had once dared to imagine her brother pressing his claim straight to King's Landing, and taking Joffrey's head?
Here they sat: two refugees of wars amongst men they could not hope to control. Him, buffeted from place to place. And her, handed from husband to husband. Would he hate her, she wondered, if he learned that she was still married?
If he knew, would he still steal glances from across the force? Sansa swallowed hard and reached for her cup.
"...What did Arya Stark have to say about the war?"
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"Don't really know. She went through a lot, getting to where she was. She used to do this thing... at night. She'd whisper these names. She didn't think I heard her, but I did. They were all the names of people she hated. The longer we traveled, the list got longer. Sometimes shorter... but usually just longer. I think if she had the chance, she would have tried to fight them all herself. Especially with that little sword of hers she had."
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She was ashamed to feel a sort of self-preserving dread, fearing she may find her own name amidst the rest.
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"I wrote that letter we spoke of, days ago. I have not sent it yet. I thought I might pass some small pieces of news, but perhaps she already knows of what happened to her sister...?"
Gently, she fished.
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"Her sister...?"
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Perhaps it was for the best. Perhaps Sansa wanted it, too: to fade from Arya's thoughts, and not become a part of her bitter prayer.
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"I suppose it never came up. Were you friends with her, too? What happened to her?"
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"I suppose that's why she never said anything. She was trying to get to her family. Her mum, her brothers, uncles, or whatever she could manage. Trying to find her sister would just get her captured." The Imp... "But the imp killed the king. So what happened to her?"
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do note the keywords if you can. they weren't intentional.
Clearly I need more meaningful keywords
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